Daily Archives: July 7, 2011

Old Clothes

This decade
you adore?
I wasn’t around for it.

I was born in time to see it,
was here for all ten of its years,
but I missed it completely.

Where I was, 
we were living 
differently.  

We didn’t have
the luxury of it.
Didn’t know

the slang of it.
Didn’t wear
the style of it.

Whatever
you loved of it
washed right past us

while we were staying
up late with 
occupying forces

and famines.
We made do,
got by.

We were not
part of
the fabulousness.

So I don’t know
your markers,
your symbols,

your retro chic.
When you say
what I’m wearing

is some geeked out
cool, ghetto
fabulous, hipster

sacred — well,
this is what I brought 
with me to this place.  

I had no idea
that this was
worthy of note;

it’s just some
of the little I saved.
So be it, then.  Well and good.

But I cannot help
but think that 
had you been present 

in my decade
instead of yours,
these words you use

to explain old clothes
would not be part
of your vocabulary now.

 


Relationship Advice

He
flows.  She
flows. They
— you know, they
flow.  

Not that
ripples
from drowned rocks
don’t shock
their surfaces,
or that
their faces
don’t show it.  
Not that, no. But
they flow, go
forward, those
slow them
only a little.

When
what is downstream’s
the driver, the dream
they work toward,
they flow — taking
the breaks of current
and banks in stride,
watching the river go
from narrow-swift to
slow-wide.

Nights
under silver-lit moonshine,
days baking bright and dry,
some days the river
nearly gone from view —
no matter, they flow,
they go, he flows
with her and she with him
and if you see them, 
follow as long as you can —
that how it’s done,
that’s how slow and present
cleans and carves through
trouble and pain —

flows
along, coupled, joined
in progress, aimed
with no effort at the end
where the flow
joins the ocean
and disappears into
what encircles all. 


How New Religions Are Born

A priest
who had just heard confession
stepped out of the booth
and
staggered,
then righted himself.

Inside his head,
one of the sins he’d just heard
had raged about for a while
and slapped God.
The priest saw him slip off His throne
and slump against the wall
of his skull.

“What was that?”
said a lone parishioner
entering the church.  “What was
that cracking, that thud?” 

And the priest thought,
and almost said
to the woman,

“That was the sound of
God falling against
the dark wall of my skull,
and possibly also the beginning
of a new Bible,”

but instead 
he merely smiled, 
and told her it was nothing.

He walked then
from confessional
back to altar
in the empty room —
a straight line
he almost succeeded in walking
without a misstep,
without imagining
tremors.